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450,000 years ago: 10th
PLANET ASTRONAUTS DIG EARTH'S GOLD*
Sasha Lessin, Ph.D.
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Prologue:
6,000
years ago, astronaut/pioneers from the planet Nibiru dictated
Enuma elish--the Creation Epic--to the Sumerians. According to
the Creation Epic, early in the Solar System’s history, from the
primordial life waters of space, our Sun first created Tiamat, the
proto-Earth, which orbited her counterclockwise. Next, Sun created
Mercury and sent Mercury with water and gold to Tiamat. Venus and
Mars, Jupiter and Saturn, Uranus and Neptune--formed as
pairs--orbited the Sun counterclockwise too. Tiamat lacked a
partner-planet, but one of her moons, Kingu, was getting big
enough to be Tiamat's partner planet and orbit the Sun, rather
than Tiamat. Then, four billion years ago, Nibiru entered the
solar system from a clockwise direction and tore away a piece of
Neptune. That piece of Neptune became its moon. Triton, unlike
other Solar System moons--orbits Neptune clockwise
As
Nibiru passed through the Solar System, it lost three moons, tore
four moons from Uranus and tilted Uranus’ orbit. Then Nibiru
ripped eleven moons from Tiamat and pulled Gaga, Saturn’s
largest moon, into clockwise orbit (between Neptune and Uranus)
where Gaga is now Pluto. Some of Nibiru's moons hit Tiamat,
creating the Pacific Basin in what was left of Tiamat. That intact
remainder of Tiamat is Earth. In the Pacific, waters and
life-seeds of Nibiru and Tiamat evolved together. The shards of
Tiamat (from the Pacific gouge Nibiru’s moon made) are Asteroids
and comets. Nibiru's gravity took all Tiamat’s moons but Kingu,
which left lifelessly orbiting Earth. Nibiru stabilized into a
clockwise orbit (equal to 3,600 orbits of Earth around the sun).
In
the Creation Epic, the Sumerians knew and wrote of an advanced
civilization on a planet in a different solar system. They had the
concept of a pulsar, the star around which Nibiru had orbited
before that star collapsed. The Nibiran astronauts, the Lords, had
their Sumerian scribes write--only lately being confirmed by our
scientists--of the composition and movement of the astronomical
bodies of Solaris' system. The Lords told the Sumerians that there
was water on asteroids, comets, Neptune, Uranus, Venus, Mars,
Saturn, Jupiter, also on the rings of Saturn and Saturn's and
Jupiter's moons as well. Our astronomers have just recently
confirmed what the Lords dictated. The Sumerian Creation Epic is
compelling evidence for the extraterrestrial settlement of Earth
by Nibirans, the human astronauts who came to be regarded as the
gods of Earth.
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Incoming
spacecraft with solar panels (the central figure),
in contact with Mission Control, Earth, passes
Mars (the six-pointed star), Earth, and its moon.
On Earth, an astronaut wearing a frogman suit
reaches his hand out to an astronaut (wearing
visor and breastplate) from Nibiru.-Sumerian Seal
Drawing transferred from Sitchin, Z., The 12th
Planet. |
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Millennia
pass after Nibiru and the solar system achieve relative orbital
stability. Life on Nibiru evolves, culminates in
technologically-sophisticated, long-lived homo sapiens, the humans
of Nibiru. Nibirans unify, after disastrous thermonuclear wars,
under a single kingship. But Nibiru is losing its atmosphere,
critical to heat regulation and survival.
500,000
years ago, King Lahma vacillates over whether to nuke the volcanoes
to regenerate the atmosphere or send miners to the asteroid belt,
where probes registered gold which could be powdered and spread
as a shield for Nibiru's atmosphere. Desperate for action to save
Nibiru, Prince Alalu pushes Lahma off a tower.
Lahma's
heir, Anu, at first agrees to let Alalu rule and marry.
Anu marries his son, Ea, to
Alalu's Daughter Dimkina; she bears Marduk, who's to ascend
Nibiru's throne after his paternal grandfather, Anu and after
his father, Ea (Anu's Firstborn). Alalu
nukes the volcanoes to no avail and rockets with goldminers
crash in the Asteroids. For nine orbits of the Sun, Alalu’s
rule gives no relief from atmospheric degradation.
Anu, the
pretender who'd let Alalu ascend, challenges him. "Anu
gave battle to Alalu. To hand-to-hand combat, with bodies naked,
Alalu he challenged. Alalu in combat was defeated; by acclaim
Anu was hailed as king." Alalu steals a missile-armed rocket
and blasts off for Earth.
(Sitchin, Lost Book of Enki.
pages 24 - 39)
From
Earth, the deposed Alalu--controlling Earth’s gold and
positioning nuclear weapons to strike Nibiru on its next pass by
Earth--demands Anu return his throne on Nibiru. But now,
Anu has a new successor, Enlil, his Anu's Foremost
Son by virtue of Anu's marriage to his paternal half sister,
Antu. Enlil, demands proof of gold. Alalu beams
documentary proof. Enlil and the Nibiru Council implore Anu to
keep his throne. At the Council, Ea, Firstborn son of Anu
and Son-in-law to Alalu (therefore acceptable to both) proposes
he verify gold on Earth. If there's gold there, Ea says, let
Alalu be Earth's King. If the gold saves Nibiru's atmosphere,
Anu and Alalu can wrestle for kingship of Nibiru. "Let me
in a chariot
[rocket]
to Earth journey, a path through the
Bracelet
[Asteroids]
with water, not fire [Alalu had used
nuclear blasting to get through the Asteroids] I shall fashion.
On Earth, from the waters let me the precious gold to obtain; to
Nibiru back it will be sent."
[op.cit: 66]
Anu endorses Ea’s
plan and sends him (not Enlil, who wanted to go) with pilot Anzu
and fifty astronauts to Earth.
Ea
exhausts his rocket's water blasting Asteroids. He needs water to
run his power system in the rocket, so he lands next to a lake on
Mars and draws water. He blasts off again for Earth, "its
gold Nibiru's fate for salvation or doom containing."
[op.cit.,
71] Alalu guides Ea's band ashore. Ea builds a settlement,
Eridu, at the head of the Persian Gulf, extracts gold from the
gulf and builds an airplane from which he and his pilot Abgal
prospect for gold and take soil samples from all over the planet.
Anu
beams orders from Nibiru for Ea to take Alalu's ship back to
Nibiru with as much gold as possible. Ea and Abgal find seven
nuclear missiles in Alalu's rocket; they hide them in a cave. When
Anzu comes to ready Alalu's rocket to blast home, he see the
missiles gone and angrily demands them so he can blast back
through the asteroids. "Foresworn is the weapons' use,"
says Ea [op.cit: 82]. Ordering Anzu to stay on Earth, Ea programs a
return route through the Asteroids, and orders Abgal--his airplane
pilot–fly Alalu’s ship to Nibiru with sample gold to test as
an atmospheric shield there.
On
Nibiru, the scientists process the gold "to make of it the
finest dust, to skyward launch it was hauled away. A Shar [One
orbit of Nibiru around the Sun, equal to 3, 600 Earth years;
Nibiruans are so long-lived they seem immortal by our standards]
did the fashioning last, a Shar did the testing continue. With
rockets was the dust hearvenward carried, by crystals’ beams was
it dispersed." But "when Nibiru near the Sun came, the
golden dust was by its rays disturbed; the healing in the
atmosphere was dwindled, the breach to bigness returned."
[op. cit. 86] Anu sends Abgal back to Earth for more gold, but the
yield extracted from the Gulf is small. Abgal speeds back to
Nibiru with this insufficient amount while Ea prospects for and
finds huge gold veins in southeast Africa (Abzu).
Ea
beams news of his find to Anu on Nibiru. Ea’s half brother Enlil
(who’d wanted, rather than Ea, to himself head the Earth
expedition) demands proof of lots of gold, saying Ea’d already
given false hope that enough gold could come from Earth’s waters
to save Nibiru’s atmosphere. So Anu sends Enlil to check on Ea’s
find and command Mission Earth. Enlil confirms the African gold
and beams Anu for help resolving his competition for leadership
with Ea and Alalu as well. Enlil evokes the Nibiran rule that he
has dynastic precedence as issue of Anu and his half sister Antu
over Anu’s Firstborn, Ea.
Anu
flies to Earth and draws lots with Ea and Enlil. One of them, Anu
decrees, will rule Nibiru; one, African mining operations and sea
transport; and one of them will control the Persian Gulf
headquarters. "By their lots the tasks they divided; Anu to
Nibiru to return, its ruler on the throne to remain. The Edin
[Mesopotamia] to Enlil was allotted, to be Lord of Command, more
settlements to establish, of the skyships and their heros charge
to take. Of all the lands until they the bar of the seas
encounter, the leader to be. To Ea the seas and the oceans as his
domain were granted, lands beyond the bar of the waters by him to
be governed, in the Abzu [southeastern Africa] to be the master,
with ingenuity the gold to procure.’"
[op.cit. 92-93] Enlil’s
first act is to award Enki his initial settlement, Eridu, on the
Persian Gulf, in perpetuity.
"Forward
toward Anu Alalu stepped, shouted, ‘Mastery of Earth to me was
allotted; that was the promise when the gold finds to Nibiru I
announced! Nor have I the claim to Nibiru’s throne forsaken.’"
[op.cit. 93] Anu wrestles Alalu. "Anu on the chest of Alalu
with his foot pressed down, victory in the wrestling thereby
declaring, ‘I am King’" But when he lifts his foot from
Alalu, "swiftly he the manhood of Anu bit off, the malehood
of Anu Alalu did swallow.!"
[op.cit.94] Enlil ties Alalu up
while Enki gives Anu first-aid. Alalu, Anu groans, will slowly die
from his seed. Anu condemns Alalu to spend his last days on Mars
and on Mars drops Alalu, with food, tools and Anzu to care for
him.
When
Anu arrives back on Nibiru, he tells the Council his plans for
gold hunting through the solar system, continuous freight rockets
to and from Earth, way-stations on Mars, Earth’s Moon, other
planets and their satellites. Anu sends Earth his daughter Ninmah
with female health officers. En route, Ninmah stops at Mars, finds
Alalu and Anzu dead, but manages to revive Anzu. "The image
of Alalu upon the great rock mountain with beams they carved"
[op.cit.104]. She gave Anzu twenty men and orders to establish the
first way station for the gold freighters.
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